Cross-layer design techniques for interference-aware routing configuration in wireless mesh networks

ABSTRACT

Methods, apparatuses and systems directed to facilitating increased throughput in wireless mesh networks. Generally, according to one implementation of the present invention, routing nodes in a wireless mesh network combine metrics corresponding to the link and network layers to select a route to a root node in the wireless mesh network. In one implementation, for each neighbor, a given routing node computes a routing metric, which is based on the computed route cost and hop count, and selects a preferred neighbor as the parent routing node based on the best routing metric.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS AND PATENTS

This application makes reference to the following commonly owned U.S. patent applications and/or patents, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety for all purposes:

U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/407,584 in the name of Patrice R. Calhoun, Robert B. O'Hara, Jr. and Robert J. Friday, entitled “Method and System for Hierarchical Processing of Protocol Information in a Wireless LAN;” and

U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/213,287 in the name of Neal Dante Castagnoli and Robert J. Friday, entitled “Automatic Route Configuration in Hierarchical Wireless Mesh Networks”

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to wireless networks and, more particularly, to methods, apparatuses, and systems directed to route configuration mechanisms in wireless mesh networks.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Market adoption of wireless LAN (WLAN) technology has exploded, as users from a wide range of backgrounds and vertical industries have brought this technology into their homes, offices, and increasingly into the public air space. This inflection point has highlighted not only the limitations of earlier-generation systems, but also the changing role that WLAN technology now plays in people's work and lifestyles, across the globe. Indeed, WLANs are rapidly changing from convenience networks to business-critical networks. Increasingly, users are depending on WLANs to improve the timeliness and productivity of their communications and applications, and in doing so, require greater visibility, security, management, and performance from their networks.

Wireless mesh networks have become increasingly popular. A typical wireless mesh network consists of mesh access points (e.g., Cisco SkyCaptain mesh access points) and wireless clients. To construct self-forming and self-healing multi-hop wireless mesh networks, each mesh access point finds a route back to the root node. Thus, a routing protocol is essential for the operations of wireless mesh networks.

Traditionally, routing protocol designs follow a strict layered approach, where routing decisions are made based only on information available at the network layer. For instance, many routing protocols for wireless mesh networks use minimum hop counts as the routing metric. A hop count is the number of routing nodes (also referred to as mesh access points, links, or hops) through which a packet travels to reach the root node. While utilizing hop count as a routing metric works well in wired networks, such an approach may suffer from performance degradation in wireless networks, especially in multi-hop wireless mesh networks. Two factors contribute to such performance degradation: 1) wireless links are versatile and interference is time-varying; and 2) contention based wireless media access control (MAC) protocols introduce uncertainties in the system performance. If only network layer information such as the hop count is considered, the resulting routing configuration may cause some routing nodes in the mesh to be heavily congested and thus may adversely affect end-to-end throughput.

In addition, the IEEE Communications Magazine has been actively publishing tutorial papers on mesh networks, routing over mesh networks, QoS routing, load balancing routing, and the metrics used therein. However, such metrics presently do not include end-to-end packet delivery ratio. Some routing protocols use signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) as a routing metric. However, one problem with merely using SNR as a routing metric is that it does not take into account inter-hop interference, congestion level, and hop count. Some routing protocols may combine SNR and hop count but such a combination still does not solve the congestion and interference problem.

A problem with existing routing protocols is that they fail to choose routes with the maximum end-to-end throughput. For instance, a metric may view a two-hop route with high SNR as better than a one-hop route with medium SNR, but this does not maximize end-to-end throughput. Furthermore, routing decisions based on SNR are generally approximated by being “too poor” or “good enough.” As such, once the “good enough” SNR state is reached, there is no strong correlation between packet delivery probability and SNR, which in turn implies that SNR may not be a good predictive tool. This feature is recognized by the nonlinear SNR mapping found in the “Ease” metric. The mapping resembles a smoothed binary decision. In the “zero” region, the mapping is near zero then steeply rises towards the transition point. In the “one” region, the mapping climbs much more slowly. However, presumably for implementation ease, the shape of the mapping near the transition region does not closely match the packet delivery probability shape.

In light of the foregoing, a need in the art exists for methods, apparatuses, and systems that address the foregoing problems and that facilitate increasing end-to-end throughput. Embodiments of the present invention substantially fulfill this need.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a functional block diagram that illustrates a hierarchical wireless mesh network according to an implementation of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating the logical configuration, according to one implementation of the present invention, of a wireless routing node.

FIG. 3 is a flow chart illustrating a process flow, according to one implementation of the present invention, associated with the computation of routing metrics.

DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)

A. Overview

The present invention provides methods, apparatuses, and systems directed to facilitating increased throughput in wireless mesh networks. Generally, according to one implementation of the present invention, routing nodes in a wireless network, such as a wireless mesh network, combine metrics corresponding to the link and network layers to select a route to a root node in a wireless mesh network. While the embodiments of the present invention disclose herein are described in the context of hierarchical wireless mesh networks implementing tree-based routing protocols, the present invention may also apply to other types of networks supporting and dynamically configuring paths to destination nodes. In one implementation, each routing node generates link layer metrics and network layer metrics. Link layer metrics are statistics measured at the data link layer and, in one implementation, may include a queued packet delivery ratio (QPDR) and a transmitted packet delivery ratio (TPDR). As described in more detail below, the QPDR relates the number of packets read onto a transmit queue compared to the number of packets received on a given link. The TPDR measures the percentage of successful packet deliveries relative to the number of delivery attempts. These packet delivery metrics or ratios indicate the quality (e.g., congestion and interference levels) of the transmission path observed at a given routing node. In one implementation, the routing nodes may employ a smoothing function at the transmitting side and calculate long-term averages to smooth these packet delivery ratios. Network layer metrics are statistics measured at the network layer and, in one implementation, may include hop count. The hop count is the number of routing nodes through which a packet travels from a given routing node upstream to the root node. The end-to-end throughput typically varies approximately inverse linearly with the number of hops on a given route.

In one implementation, neighboring routing nodes, or “neighbors,” exchange hello or neighbor messages, which contain a route cost and a hop count associated with the transmitting routing node. Routing nodes use the information contained in these messages to select a route to a root node. As described in more detail below, in one implementation, the route cost advertised by a given routing node is the product of all packet delivery ratios (e.g., QPDR and TPDR) at all hops from the routing node to the root node. As described in more detail below, in one implementation, each routing node independently computes a link cost, which is the local QPDR multiplied by the local TPDR. Furthermore, in one implementation, for each neighbor, a given routing node computes a route cost and a hop count. In one implementation, for each neighbor, a given routing node computes a routing metric, which is based on the computed route cost and hop count, and selects a preferred neighbor as the parent routing node based on the best routing metric. Since each selected neighbor in turn has a selected/preferred neighbor, the cumulative selection process effectively creates a route from a given routing node to the root node. The routing nodes achieve increased end-to-end throughput by selecting parent routing nodes (i.e., preferred neighbors) having optimal hop costs and reduced hop count. As described in more detail below, in one implementation, the route cost, and hop count derived from the route cost and hop count of the selected neighbor becomes the new route cost and new hop count to be advertised in hello messages to other neighbor routing nodes.

B. Exemplary Wireless Mesh Network System Architecture

B.1. Mesh Network Topology

For didactic purposes, an embodiment of the present invention is described as operating in a hierarchical wireless mesh network illustrated in FIG. 1. The present invention, however, can operate in a wide variety of hierarchical mesh network configurations. FIG. 1 illustrates a wireless mesh network according to an implementation of the present invention. In one implementation, the wireless mesh network includes a wireless mesh control system 20, and a plurality of routing nodes. In one implementation, implementations of the present invention achieve a hierarchical architectural routing overlay imposed on the mesh network of routing nodes to create a downstream direction towards leaf routing nodes 34, and an upstream direction toward the root nodes 30. For example, in the hierarchical mesh network illustrated in FIG. 1, first hop routing node 1 30 is the parent of intermediary routing node 3 32. In addition, intermediate routing node 3 32 is the parent to leaf routing node 5 34 and intermediate routing node 6 32. In one implementation, this hierarchical relationship is used in routing packets between wireless clients 40, or between wireless clients 40 and network 50. In the wireless mesh network illustrated in FIG. 1, the routing nodes are arranged in two hierarchical tree structuresone root node is routing node 1, while the other root node is routing node 2. Of course, a variety of hierarchical configurations are possible including a fewer or greater number of hierarchical tree structures. Still further, the hierarchical configuration may be dynamic in that the parent and child relationships between routing nodes may change depending on factors such as congestion, node failures, and the like. As discussed in more detail below, implementations of the present invention allow for automatic configuration of the hierarchical routing overlay. In addition, some implementations of the present invention adapt to changing conditions of the hierarchical mesh network, such as RF interference, node failures, and the like.

The routing nodes in the mesh network, in one implementation, generally include one radio, operating in a first frequency band, and an associated wireless communication functionality to communicate with other routing nodes to thereby implement the wireless backbone, as discussed more fully below. All or a subset of the routing nodes, in one implementation, also include an additional radio, operating in a second, non-interfering frequency band, and other wireless communication functionality to establish and maintain wireless connections with mobile stations, such as wireless client 40. For example, in 802.11 wireless networks, the backbone radios on the wireless routing nodes may transmit wireless packets between each other using the 802.11a protocol on the 5 GHz band, while the second radio on each wireless node may interact with wireless clients on the 2.4 GHz band (802.11b/g). Of course, this relation can also be reversed with backhaul traffic using the 802.11b/g frequency band, and client traffic using the 802.11a band. In other implementations, however, a single radio (and frequency band) is used to support both backbone and client traffic.

In one implementation, the backbone or backhaul radios of routing nodes for a given tree are set to the same channel within the backhaul frequency band. Collectively, the routing nodes, in one implementation, use the Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) disclosed in the IEEE 802.11 standard to coordinate transmissions in the wireless mesh. Other contention-based transmission mechanisms can also be used. Additionally, a variety of channel assignment schemes can be used. For example, for a given routing node, the operating channel for upstream data transfer, in one implementation, can be different than the operating channel used for downstream data transfer. For example, wireless transmissions between routing node 1 and routing node 3 can occur on channel 1, while routing node 3 communicates with routing node 5 and routing node 6 on channel 2. In one implementation, the upstream and downstream channels assigned to a given routing node are non-overlapping channels, while in other implementations they are overlapping channels. In one implementation, the channel assignments between routing nodes are statically configured. In other implementations, operating channels can be dynamically assigned. However, this channel assignment scheme is not required by the present invention. In other implementations, all routing nodes in the mesh network operate on the same channel within the backhaul frequency band.

As discussed more fully below, each routing node in the mesh network, in one implementation, is operative to transmit and receive packets from other routing nodes according to a mesh routing hierarchy. Each mesh routing node, in one implementation, is further operative to establish and maintain wireless connections to one or more wireless client devices 40. A mesh network control system 20, in one implementation, is operative to monitor which routing node that each wireless client is associated and operative to route packets destined for the wireless clients to the wireless routing node to which the client is associated.

B.2. Mesh Routing Node Configuration

The following describes, for didactic purposes, the configuration of a mesh routing node according to one implementation of the present invention. Other routing node configurations are possible. FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram illustrating the logical and/or functional components of a routing node according to one implementation of the present invention. The routing node illustrated in FIG. 2 includes a wireless backbone interface unit 60 operating in a first frequency band, and a WLAN interface unit 80 operating in a second frequency band. Specifically, as FIG. 2 illustrates, a mesh routing node generally comprises routing node control processor 70, wireless backbone interface unit 60, and WLAN interface unit 80. In one implementation, the routing node control processor 70, wireless backbone interface unit 60, and WLAN interface unit 80 are operably connected to each other via a system bus. Wireless back bone interface unit 60 is operative to transfer wireless frames to upstream (parent) and downstream (child) routing nodes under the control of routing node control processor 70, as discussed more fully below. WLAN interface unit 80, in one implementation, is operative to transfer wireless frames to and from wireless clients 40 under control of routing node control processor 70.

Wireless backbone interface unit 60, in one implementation, comprises first and second antennas 85 and 86, switch 62, backbone radio module 64, and backbone MAC control unit 66. In other implementations using a single omni-directional antenna, switch 62 is not required. Backbone radio module 64 includes frequency-based modulation/demodulation functionality for, in the receive direction, demodulating radio frequency signals and providing digital data streams to backbone MAC control unit 66, and in the transmit direction, receiving digital data streams and providing frequency modulated signals corresponding to the digital data stream. In one embodiment, radio module 64 is an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed (OFDM) modulation/demodulation unit. Of course, other modulation and multiplexing technologies can be employed, such as Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) or Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS). Backbone MAC control unit 66 implements data link layer functionality, such as detecting individual frames in the digital data streams, error checking the frames, and the like. In one embodiment, backbone MAC control unit 66 implements the 802.11 wireless network protocol (where 802.11, as used herein, generically refers to the IEEE 802.11 standard for wireless LANs and all its amendments). In one embodiment, the functionality described herein can be implemented in a wireless network interface chip set, such as an 802.11 network interface chip set. Of course, the present invention can be used in connection with any suitable radio-frequency-based wireless network protocol. Switch 62 switches between first antenna 85 and second antenna 86 under the control of routing node control processor 70.

WLAN interface unit 80 comprises WLAN MAC control unit 82, WLAN radio module 84, and at least one antenna 87. Similar to backbone interface unit 60, WLAN radio module 84 includes frequency-based modulation/demodulation functionality for, in the receive direction, demodulating radio frequency signals and providing digital data streams to WLAN MAC control unit 82, and in the transmit direction, receiving digital data streams and providing frequency modulated signals corresponding to the digital data stream. In one embodiment, WLAN radio module 84 is an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexed modulation-demodulation unit. In one embodiment, radio module 84 implements the OFDM functionality in a manner compliant with the IEEE 802.11a or the 802.11 g protocol, and operates in either the 5 GHz or 2.4 GHz band, respectively. WLAN radio module 84 may also operate in a manner consistent with the 802.11b protocol employing DSSS data transmission schemes. However, as discussed above, the frequency band in which the radio module 84 operates is configured, in one implementation, to be non-interfering relative to the backbone radio module 64. WLAN MAC control unit 82 implements data link layer functionality, such as detecting individual frames in the digital data streams, error checking the frames, and the like. In one embodiment, WLAN MAC control unit 82 implements the 802.11 wireless network protocol. Other suitable wireless protocols can be used in the present invention. In one embodiment, the functionality described herein can be implemented in a wireless network interface chip set, such as an 802.11 network interface chip set. Still further, WLAN interface unit 80, in one implementation, includes fast path and slow path transmit queues to allow high priority traffic (e.g., management frames) to have better or prioritized access to the communications medium over regular network traffic. Wireless backbone interface unit 60 may have similar priority functionality as well.

As discussed above, wireless backbone interface unit 60 and WLAN interface unit 80, in one implementation, operate in different frequency bands. For example, in one embodiment, backbone radio module 64 implements the OFDM encoding scheme in a manner compliant with the IEEE 802.11a protocol and, thus, operates in the 5 GHz band. WLAN radio module 84 operates in the 2.4 GHz band in a manner consistent with either the 802.11b and/or 802.11 g protocol. The use of different frequency bands for wireless backbone traffic and client traffic ensures that wireless client traffic does not substantially affect or disrupt operation of the wireless backbone implemented by the routing nodes. Of course, other schemes are possible, as the selection of frequency bands for wireless backbone traffic and wireless traffic between clients and routing nodes is a matter of engineering choice. In other implementations, different non-overlapping channels within the same band can be used for wireless backbone traffic and client traffic. In other embodiments, each routing node can include only a single radio for both the backhaul and client traffic. In yet other embodiments, the routing nodes may include more than two radios.

FIG. 2 also illustrates the logical configuration of routing node control processor 70. Routing node control processor 70, in one implementation, generally refers to the hardware modules (e.g., processor, memory), software modules (e.g., drivers, etc.) and data structures (e.g., frame buffers, queues, etc.) that control operation of the routing node. In one implementation, routing node control processor 70 generally comprises a processor (e.g., a Central Processing Unit (CPU), etc.), a memory (e.g., RAM, EPROMS, etc.), and a system bus interconnecting the memory, the processor and the network interfaces. Routing node control processor 70 may further comprise an operating system and one or more software modules and/or drivers for implementing the functions described herein. Routing node control processor 70, as discussed above, controls the operation of wireless backbone interface unit 60 and WLAN interface unit 80, both of which may reside on network cards operably connected to the system bus. In one implementation, routing node control processor 70 is operative to control the operation of wireless backbone interface unit 60 coordinate the transmission of frames in the upstream and downstream directions. In one implementation, the routing node control processor 70 may implement an upstream and downstream phase. During the downstream phase, the routing node communicates with child routing nodes. In the upstream phase, the routing node communicates with the parent routing node.

As discussed above, wireless backbone interface unit 60, in the receive direction, provides wireless frames received at first antenna 85 or second antenna 86 and transmitted to routing node control processor 70. Flag detector 72, in one implementation, is operative to inspect wireless frames received from other routing nodes, and to determine whether the wireless frames should be forwarded along the wireless backbone or to a wireless client associated with the instant routing node via WLAN interface unit 80. In response to control signals transmitted by flag detector 72, logical switch 74 transmits the wireless packets along a WLAN path to WLAN interface unit 80, or along a wireless backbone path to the upstream or downstream queues 77 and 78. As FIG. 2 illustrates, routing node control processor 70 also includes logical switch 76 that switches between upstream transmit and receive queues 77 and downstream transmit and receive queues 78 depending on the current operational phase or mode. For example, wireless frames received from a parent routing node during an upstream phase are buffered in the downstream transmit/receive queues 78 for transmission to a child routing node for transmission during the downstream phase. Oppositely, wireless frames received from a child routing node during the downstream phase are buffered in the parent slot queue 77 for transmission to the parent routing node during the upstream phase. In one implementation, routing node control processor 70 maintains separate transmit and receive queues for each of the parent and child routing nodes to which the current node is associated. In the transmit direction, logical switch 76 switches between the downstream and upstream queues depending on the transmission phase. In one implementation, both the upstream and downstream queues 77 and 78 may include separate queuing structures to achieve a variety of purposes. For example, routing node control processor 70 may be configured to include fast path and slow path queues for each of the upstream and downstream queues 77 and 78. Still further, the routing node control processor 70 can be configured to omit an upstream and downstream transmission phase, relying instead on link-layer contention-based mechanisms to coordinate transmission between parent and child routing nodes.

As discussed above, routing node control processor 70 is operative to switch between first and second antennas 85 and 86. First antenna 85, in one implementation, can be used for data transfer with a parent routing node, while second antenna 86 can be used for transfer with one or more child routing nodes. In one embodiment, first and second antennas 85 and 86 are directional antennas whose peak gains are oriented depending on the location of the parent and child routing nodes. For example, in one implementation, first antenna 85 is generally oriented in the direction of the parent routing node. Second antenna 86 is oriented in the general direction of one or more child routing nodes. In one implementation, the peak gain and beamwidth of the downstream directional antennas place an effective limit on the separation between the child routing nodes. However, in other implementations, the child and parent routing nodes are not associated with a particular antenna. As discussed more fully below, the antenna used to communicate with a given routing node can be determined during a neighbor discovery and maintenance process. Antennas 85 and 85 can be any suitable directional antennas, such as patch antennas, yagi antennas, parabolic, and dish antennas. In one embodiment, the peak gains of the antennas are offset from one another in a manner that maximizes coverage in all directions. In another implementation, an omni-directional antenna can be used in place of first and second antennas 85 and 86. Of course, a plurality of omni-directional antennas can also be used in connection with spatial antenna pattern diversity schemes to ameliorate multipath effects in indoor and outdoor systems.

In one embodiment, the routing nodes include functionality allowing for detection of the signal strength and other attributes of the signal received from neighboring routing nodes. For example, the IEEE 802.11 standard defines a mechanism by which RF energy is measured by the circuitry (e.g., chip set) on a wireless network adapter or interface card. The 802.11 protocol specifies an optional parameter, the received signal strength indicator (RSSI). This parameter is a measure by the PHY layer of the energy observed at the antenna used to receive the current packet or frame. RSSI is measured between the beginning of the start frame delimiter (SFD) and the end of the PLCP header error check (HEC). This numeric value is typically an integer with an allowable range of 0-255 (a 1-byte value). Typically, 802.11 chip set vendors have chosen not to actually measure 256 different signal levels. Accordingly, each vendors 802.11-compliant adapter has a specific maximum RSSI value (“RSSI_Max”). Therefore, the RF energy level reported by a particular vendor's wireless network adapter will range between 0 and RSSI_Max. Resolving a given RSSI value reported by a given vendor's chip set to an actual power value (dBm) can be accomplished by reference to a conversion table. In addition, some wireless networking chip sets also report received signal strength in SNR which is the ratio of Signal to Noise, rather than or in addition to RSSI which is an absolute estimate of signal power. Many chip sets include functionality and corresponding APIs to allow for a determination of signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) associated with packets received on the wireless network interfaces. As discussed more fully below, detected signal attribute information can be used in automatically configuring the mesh network.

Root nodes 30 and leaf routing nodes 34 can include a subset of the functionality discussed above, since these routing nodes do not have either a parent or child routing node. For example, both root and leaf routing nodes 30 and 34 can each be configured to include a single directional, or omni-directional, antenna. Other functionality can also be omitted such as switch 62. In one implementation, however, each root or leaf routing node can include all the essential physical functionality discussed above, and be configured to operate in a root or leaf routing mode (as appropriate), where the downstream/upstream synchronization functionality is disabled. In that case, the leaf routing nodes 34, for example, operate in upstream mode waiting for their respective data slots. A configuration mechanism facilitates reconfiguration and extensions to the mesh network. For example, the wireless mesh network may be extended by simply adding additional routing nodes in the downstream direction of a leaf routing node and re-configuring the leaf routing node.

Other configurations are also possible. For example, the wireless routing node can include more than two directional antennas. For example, each backbone radio interface may be operably connected to four directional antennas, whose peak gains are each oriented at 90 degrees to each other. Still further, as discussed in more detail below, each routing node further comprises a neighbor state machine operative to discover and maintain data relating to neighboring routing nodes, as disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 11/213,287.

C. Local Link Layer and Network Layer Metrics

As described above, each routing node generates link layer metrics and network layer metrics corresponding to operation of the backhaul or backbone network interfaces. Link layer metrics are statistics measured at the data link layer and, in one implementation, may include a queued packet delivery ratio (QPDR) and a transmitted packet delivery ratio (TPDR). Network layer metrics are statistics measured at the network layer and, in one implementation, may include hop count. QPDR, TPDR, and hop count are described in detail below.

C.1. Queued Packet Delivery Ratio and Transmitted Packet Delivery Ratio

As described above, the QPDR measures the percentage of packets that are not dropped in a queue, and the TPDR measures the percentage of successful packet deliveries. These packet delivery ratios indicate the quality (e.g., congestion and interference levels) of a given routing node.

C.1.a. Queued Packet Delivery Ratio

As described above, the QPDR generally indicates the level of congestion at the link layer observed at a given routing node. More specifically, in one implementation, the QPDR is the ratio between the number of packets that are written onto the receive/inbound queue and the number of packets that are read onto the transmit/outbound queue, as shown in the following equation: ${QPDR} = \frac{{number}\quad{of}\quad{packets}\quad{written}\quad{onto}\quad{the}\quad{transmit}\quad{queue}}{{number}\quad{of}\quad{packets}\quad{read}\quad{onto}\quad{the}\quad{recieve}\quad{queue}}$

The number of packets that are read onto the transmit/outbound queue represent the number of packets that are transmitted from a given routing node, which includes both successful transmissions and unsuccessful transmissions. The number of packets that are read onto the receive/inbound queue represent the number of packets that are received by the routing node. The QPDR can be a good indicator of the congestion level at a given routing node. A lower QPDR indicates that the routing node may be receiving more packets than it is transmitting (i.e., more coming in than going out). Congestion may cause the receive queues at a given routing node to overflow, requiring that packets be dropped prior to transmission. Furthermore, because very few packets can be relayed to the next hop when a routing node is heavily congested, some older packets, after a timeout, may be dropped. Accordingly, a routing node with a low QPDR is likely to be experiencing congestion and frequent incoming queue overflow, which is likely to cause the routing node to drop packets.

In one implementation, the queued packet drop rate at the routing node is 1-QPDR, as shown in the following equation: Drop rate=1−QPDR

The throughput drops inverse linearly with the increase of the number of hops, and bandwidth is wasted if data packets are dropped at intermediate routing nodes. The more hops that a packet traverses before it is dropped, the more bandwidth is wasted. Hence, choosing good links not only helps to establish reliable routes but also improves end-to-end throughput, because fewer packets are likely to be dropped along the route.

C.1.b. Transmitted Packet Delivery Ratio

As described above, the TPDR measures the percentage of successful packet deliveries. More specifically, in one implementation, the TPDR is the ratio between the number of successfully transmitted packets and the number of transmitted packets (including re-transmissions), as shown in the following equation: ${TPDR} = \frac{{number}\quad{of}\quad{successfully}\quad{transmitted}\quad{packets}}{{number}\quad{of}\quad{packet}\quad{transmission}\quad{attempts}}$

The number of packet transmission attempts represents the number of attempts to transmit wireless packets. In one implementation, the number of attempts may be an actual number of attempts. In another implementation, the number of attempts may be an estimated number of attempts. In one implementation, the estimated number of attempts may be computed based on the number of successful transmissions (i.e., where acknowledgement messages are received) plus the product of the number of packets dropped from the transmit queue and the configured retry limit after which packets are dropped, as shown in the following equation: Estimated attempts=number of successful transmissions+(number dropped packets from transmit queue*max retry limit)

The TPDR ratio is a good indicator of the link quality. The TPDR characterizes the percentage of successful packet deliveries in noisy and interference-limited environments. Under the collision avoidance mechanisms in the IEEE 802.11 MAC protocol, a routing node may defer if it detects an interfering source, in which case, the routing node may be considered to experience congestion. Furthermore, a routing node may be considered interference-limited if the routing node cannot detect the source of the interference, and/or if the interference corrupts the data transmission of the routing node.

As described above, in one implementation, the routing nodes may employ a smoothing function for QPDR and TPDR at the transmitting side and calculate long-term averages to smooth the packet delivery ratios. In one implementation, the routing nodes may apply a standard smoothing function such as weighted moving averages or exponential moving averages, as shown in the following equation: D _(reported)=(1−α)D _(past) +αD _(current) Alpha (α) is a weighting factor and may be a user-defined value (e.g., α=0.75) configured as a matter of engineering or design choice. D. Preferred Neighbor/Route Selection Process

The QPDR and TPDR described above form certain elemental aspects of the route configuration process for selecting a neighboring routing node as a parent routing node for transmitting data packets upstream to the root node. As described above, in one implementation, neighboring routing nodes, or “neighbors,” transmit hello messages, each of which contain a data structure containing a route cost, a hop count, and a node identification (node ID) to identify the transmitting routing node. Route cost and hop count are described in detail below. The neighbor or hello messages can be transmitted on a periodic basis. In one implementation, the routing nodes maintain the latest information received from hello messages transmitted from neighboring routing nodes in association with a time stamp.

FIG. 3 is a flow chart illustrating a process flow, according to one implementation of the present invention, associated with the selection of a parent routing node. In one implementation, the process illustrated in FIG. 3 can be implemented after an initial neighbor discovery phase and, subsequently, during a routing maintenance phase. In one implementation, a routing node is triggered to begin the selection process by an event. In one implementation, the event may be the receipt of a hello message from a routing node. In another implementation, the event may be a periodic trigger signal (e.g., every second). Accordingly, each routing node determines if there is a trigger (302).

D. 1. Hop Cost

As described above, in one implementation, each routing node, if triggered, independently computes its hop cost (304). In one implementation, the hop cost is the locally observed QPDR multiplied by the locally observed TPDR, as shown in the following equation: Hop cost=QPDR*TPDR

The hop cost represents the ratio of successful deliveries at a given routing node, and may also be referred to as the success delivery ratio at the current hop (i.e., current routing node). In one implementation, each routing node computes its hop cost upon detection of the trigger and/or periodically (e.g., every 5 ms). In one implementation, the routing node accesses various MIB counters associated with the backhaul network interface to gather the requisite packet transmission statistics and compute the packet delivery ratios.

D.2. Scan Neighbor List

Each routing node then scans a neighbor list (306), which provides a list of neighboring routing nodes as detected by receipt of hello messages. In one implementation, each routing node stores information contained in the hello messages for processing. In one implementation, the neighbor list includes time stamps so that the routing node can determine whether the information corresponding to a given routing node is recent enough to be considered in the route selection processes described herein. For each qualifying neighbor (308), each routing node computes a route cost, a hop count, and a routing metric, as described in detail below. A qualifying neighbor, for example, can be a neighboring routing node for which the current routing node has received a hello message within a threshold period of time.

D.3. Route Cost

In one implementation, a routing node computes a route cost for each neighbor (310). For ease of illustration, in the examples below, the notation ( ) signifies the current routing node and associated metrics/costs, and the notation (i) signifies a neighboring routing node and associated metrics/costs.

In one implementation, the route cost (j) at a given routing node (j) is calculated by multiplying the route cost (i) advertised by a given neighbor (i) in a hello message with the hop cost (j) of the routing node (j), as shown in the following equation: Route cost (j,i)=route_cost(i)*hop_cost(j)

In one implementation, the route cost computed by the current routing node for a given neighbor represents a success packet delivery ratio that factors in all packet delivery ratios (e.g., QPDR and TPDR) at all hops from the routing node through the discovered route to the root node. The route cost may also be referred to as the end-to-end packet delivery ratio.

D.4 Hop Count

In one implementation, for each neighbor, each routing node computes a hop count (312), which is the number of routing nodes, or hops, through which a packet travels upstream from a given routing node to the root node. Simulation results show that the end-to-end throughput varies approximately inverse linearly with the number of hops on a given-route. Accordingly, to maximize the end-to-end throughput, a routing protocol may reduce the number of hops a packet needs to travel.

As described above, a hello message from a given neighbor (i) provides the hop count of the route from the neighbor (i) to the root node. Accordingly, the hop count of the routing node (j) relative to the neighbor (i) would be the hop count (i) plus 1, as shown in the following equation: Hop_count (j,i)=hop_count(i)+1

D.5. Routing Metric

In one implementation, for each neighbor, each routing node computes a routing metric (314). In one implementation, the routing metric is based on the computed route cost (j) and the computed hop count (j), as shown in the following equation: Routing_metric (j)=(1−route_cost(j,i))^(n)*(hop count(j,i))^((1-n)) Alpha α is a user defined weighting factor between zero and unity, inclusive. Alpha a balances the hop count and the route cost. When alpha α is zero, the routing protocol essentially results in a minimum hop routing algorithm. In one implementation, a routing node starts to calculate its routing metric only after its hop count is known. Initially (e.g., at start up), both packet delivery ratios are set to 100% and the route cost is set to 0. Therefore, at the neighbor discovery phase, the routing algorithm is essentially minimum hop routing. Once the routing protocol enters the route maintenance phase and begins gathering statistics about itself and neighboring routing nodes, each routing node can measure its own packet delivery ratios and may choose a better route based on the newly calculated routing metrics.

In one implementation, each routing node selects a preferred neighbor based on the best routing metric value (316) for upstream packet transmission to the root node. In one implementation, the best routing metric value is the smallest value. In one implementation, the route cost(j) and hop counts), derived from the route cost(i) and hop count(i) of the selected neighbor, becomes the new route cost and new hop count to be transmitted in hello messages to other neighbor routing nodes.

Since each selected neighbor in turn has a selected/preferred neighbor as a parent routing node, the cumulative selection process across the routing nodes in the wireless mesh effectively creates a hierarchical routing node configuration that can dynamically adjust with node failures and other changes, such as changes to the RF characteristics of the wireless environment. The routing nodes achieve end-to-end throughput by selecting hops (i.e., preferred neighbors) having optimal hop costs and reduced hop counts. The routing nodes also avoid heavily congested links and unreliable, interference-limited links as well as maximizing end-to-end throughput. Another advantage with embodiments of the present invention is that at any given time, traffic from a sender to a destination travels through the optimal route. Accordingly, neither the source nor the destination needs to maintain multiple routes at the same time.

While the implementations below are described in the context of a Tree-Based Routing (TBR) protocol, the metrics describe above and below may be applied to any mesh routing protocol and any route discovery protocols (e.g., reactive and proactive protocols). In one implementation, a TBR protocol has two phases: 1) a neighbor-discovery or route setup phase and 2) a route maintenance phase. In the neighbor-discovery phase, routing is performed based on the minimum hop count. By default, the packet delivery ratios are set to 100%. As such, a root node will have the highest high packet delivery ratios. Also, the hop count is initially set to invalid or null (i.e., 0). As such, the root node will not have a hop count and the hop count will increase as a given routing node becomes more distant from the root node. In one implementation, when a routing node does not have data packets to deliver, the routing node measures the link delivery ratio on hello messages. Therefore, at the neighbor discovery phase, the routing is essentially minimum hop routing. Once the routing protocol enters a route maintenance phase, each routing node can measure its own packet delivery ratios and may choose a better route based on the newly calculated routing metric.

The present invention has been explained with reference to specific embodiments. For example, while embodiments of the present invention have been described as operating in connection with IEEE 802.11 networks, the present invention can be used in connection with any suitable wireless network protocols. Furthermore, while the embodiments of the present invention disclose herein have been described in the context of hierarchical wireless mesh networks implementing tree-based routing protocols, the present invention may also apply to other types of networks that include mechanisms to dynamically configure paths to destination nodes. Other embodiments will be evident to those of ordinary skill in the art. It is therefore not intended that the present invention be limited, except as indicated by the appended claims. 

1. A routing node operative to communicate with neighboring routing nodes in a wireless network, the routing node comprising: one or more wireless network interfaces; one or more processors; a memory; and a routing node application, physically stored in the memory, comprising instructions operable to cause the one or more processors and the routing node to receive a route cost and a hop count from one or more neighboring routing nodes; compute a hop cost, wherein the hop cost is based at least in part on a queued packet delivery ratio and a transmitted packet delivery ratio observed at the routing node; and select a neighboring routing node for upstream packet transmissions to a destination node based at least in part on the route cost and hop count corresponding to one or more neighboring routing nodes, and the hop cost.
 2. The routing node of claim 1 wherein the routing node application further comprises instructions operable to cause the one or more processors and the routing node to compute, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a second route cost based the hop cost and the route cost of the respective neighboring routing node.
 3. The routing node of claim 2 wherein the routing node application further comprises instructions operable to cause the one or more processors and the routing node to compute, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a second hop count based on the hop count of the respective neighboring routing node.
 4. The routing node of claim 3 wherein the routing node application further comprises instructions operable to cause the one or more processors and the routing node to compute, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a routing metric based on the product of the second route cost and the second hop count corresponding to a respective neighboring routing node.
 5. The routing node of claim 4 wherein the routing node application further comprises instructions operable to cause the one or more processors and the routing node to advertise the second route cost and the second hop count corresponding to the selected neighboring routing node to other neighboring routing nodes.
 6. The routing node of claim 3 wherein the second route cost and the second hop count are weighted such that a selected one of the second route cost and the second hop count has greater influence in the resulting value of the routing metric.
 7. The routing node of claim 1 wherein the destination node is a root node in a hierarchical wireless mesh network.
 8. In a routing node operative to communicate with neighboring routing nodes in a wireless network, a method comprising: receiving a route cost and a hop count from one or more neighboring routing nodes; computing a hop cost, wherein the hop cost is based at least in part on a queued packet delivery ratio and a transmitted packet delivery ratio observed at the routing node; and selecting a neighboring routing node for upstream packet transmissions to a destination node based at least in part on the route cost and hop count corresponding to one or more neighboring routing nodes, and the hop cost.
 9. The method of claim 8 further comprising computing, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a second route cost based the hop cost and the route cost of the respective neighboring routing node.
 10. The method of claim 9 further comprising computing, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a second hop count based on the hop count of the respective neighboring routing node.
 11. The method of claim 10 further comprising computing, for each neighboring routing node in the one or more neighboring routing nodes, a routing metric based on the product of the second route cost and the second hop count corresponding to a respective neighboring routing node.
 12. The method of claim 11 further comprising advertising the second route cost and the second hop count corresponding to the selected neighboring routing node to other neighboring routing nodes.
 13. The method of claim 10 wherein the second route cost and the second hop count are weighted such that a selected one of the second route cost and the second hop count has greater influence in the resulting value of the routing metric.
 14. A routing node operative to communicate with neighboring routing nodes in a wireless network, the routing node comprising: means for wirelessly communication with one or more routing nodes, and for receiving a route cost and a hop count from one or more neighboring routing nodes; means for computing a hop cost, wherein the hop cost is based at least in part on a queued packet delivery ratio and a transmitted packet delivery ratio observed at the routing node; and means for selecting a neighboring routing node for upstream packet transmissions to a destination node based at least in part on the route cost and hop count corresponding to one or more neighboring routing nodes, and the hop cost. 